ceewi1
VIP Member
Folding with multiple GPUs now possible:
http://fahinfo.org/gpu/multi_gpu_howto.html
http://folding.stanford.edu/FAQ-ATI.html
http://fahinfo.org/gpu/multi_gpu_howto.html
http://folding.stanford.edu/FAQ-ATI.html
I'm in a Junior Achievement Program and they have a computer lab, 5 2.8 Gh P4s with 1 GB Ram each, and i talked with the coordinator, and she forwarded me on to the branch manager, but said that they do leave them on 24/7 and they do have DSL, so wish me luck...
Goodness no, i don't want to get passed by myself!
Whatever. Suit yourself. So far, people have only used computers that they have built, or they own for their own usernames. I'll have to start asking others to fold for my username if you have them fold for you!
Jet, the AIW X1900's I've read are not good overclockers. Which, with all of those extra things on the PCB, I can understand it. Perhaps with an aftermarket cooler, if they make one for it.
jan did you get my PM over the HT question
What about hyperthreaded (HT) CPUs?
The SMP client was originally intended for multi-core CPUs, which generally do not support HT. For machines with 2 physical CPUs, we do recommend enabling HT for the SMP client as this presents the operating system with what looks like 4 logical processors (and our SMP client is intended for 4 processors). If you have 4 physical CPUs, we do not recommend using HT, as this presents the operating system with 8 logical processors, which will make the SMP client run inefficiently (especially since the logical processors coming from HT run much slower than the normal ones).
I havent been folding for awhile because something went wrong with my desktop computer but now i am getting a laptop sometime next week so i will be able to start folding again but i wont be able to fold 24/7 like i used to.
Im still not sure on this, my research suggests that on single core rig, setting Hyperthreading can boast 20-30%ish.What about hyperthreaded (HT) CPUs?
The SMP client was originally intended for multi-core CPUs, which generally do not support HT. For machines with 2 physical CPUs, we do recommend enabling HT for the SMP client as this presents the operating system with what looks like 4 logical processors (and our SMP client is intended for 4 processors). If you have 4 physical CPUs, we do not recommend using HT, as this presents the operating system with 8 logical processors, which will make the SMP client run inefficiently (especially since the logical processors coming from HT run much slower than the normal ones).
However, if you try and run two instances of Folding@home on the same Hyper-Threaded CPU, they will both be competing for the same instruction units. This essentially means that each Folding@home instance shares its access to those instruction units. Overall a small performance gain is achieved due to the few calculations that can be run on the "spare" instruction units. However the end result is that the two WUs you are running complete in just under twice the length of time as a single WU would because of the afore mentioned instruction unit sharing.
another reason to move to linux2/3 down the above site said:November 2006 The SMP client is now looking good enough that we are starting a more broad beta test outside of Stanford. If that looks good, we will move to a completely open beta test of this new client. The SMP client supports OSX/Intel natively (which means a major points boost for OSX donors) as well as 64-bit linux (with 32-bit linux hopefully to come soon). Windows support will come much later, as this is a very different architecture for porting than OSX & Linux.